Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2023)
Impact of Indian Ocean Dipole on Atlantic Niño predictive skill
Abstract
Recent studies suggest that tropical Indian Ocean sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies, especially those associated with the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), may trigger Atlantic Niño through atmospheric teleconnection. However, it remains unclear whether the former has an impact on the prediction skill of the latter. This work applies hindcasts from 21 operational seasonal forecast systems based on dynamical climate models to verify the impact of the IOD in boreal autumn on the predictive skill of the Atlantic Niño in the following winter. The results indicate that the prediction skills of both the IOD and Atlantic Niño show pronounced seasonality, with a peak in the target season of boreal autumn for the former and in the following winter for the latter. The models with a stronger connection between the boreal autumn IOD and the following winter Atlantic Niño appear to have a higher skill in predicting the latter when compared to the weaker connection models. This leads to a significant in-phase relationship between the prediction skills of the boreal winter Atlantic Niño and the strength of the IOD–Atlantic Niño connection among the models. When compared to the weaker connection models, the stronger connection models tend to simulate a warmer climatological mean of SST in the tropical Indian Ocean during boreal autumn and winter. The warmer climatological mean of SST benefits a stronger atmospheric circulation response to the underlying SST forcing associated with the IOD. This suggests that mean state bias in the tropical Indian Ocean plays a role in modulating the strength of the simulated IOD–Atlantic Niño connection and thus prediction skill of the Atlantic Niño in boreal winter.
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